IDOMENEO

By Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

libretto by Giambattista Varesco

Dec 6, 8, 9 & 10 2006

The 25 year old Mozart composed Idomeneo as perhaps the last great opera seria. Amongst it's many glories is his wonderful use of the orchestra and chorus (and it was for these reasons - amongst others - that we chose it). The immensity of the music and the themes have produced a work like no other, and one that is not well understood.

Read

[ Open All | Close All ]

1] Kings, Heroes and Citizens

The most painful and difficult employment in the world, in my
opinion, is worthily to discharge the office of a king. I excuse
more of their mistakes than men commonly do, in consideration
of the intolerable weight of their function, which astounds me.(1)

Mozart was 24 years old when in 1780 he was commissioned
by the Elector Karl Theodor of Bavaria to write an opera for the
court in Munich. Karl Theodor had been, until shortly before,
the Prince Palatine and ruler of Mannheim in the Rhineland.
Although he made himself rather unpopular in Munich by
spending much of his reign in Bavaria trying to swap parts
of his lands for a crown in the Netherlands, he nevertheless
made great contributions to the town planning and architecture
of Munich, and he was a great patron of the arts. Idomeneo
premiered the following year, 1781, at the Cuvilliés Theatre
in Munich, and was warmly received, the Elector himself
commenting: ʻNo music has ever made such an impression on
me. It is magnificent.ʼ

Nevertheless, because the opera is a serious opera, unlike any
of his mature works except the equally neglected La clemenza
di Tito, it has a form and idiom very different from the operas on
which Mozartʼs reputation rests today. Idomeneo is a work that
for many years has been regarded as a relict, an opera seria
carried over into a world whose circumstances were no longer
those which had caused the genre to come into being, like a
wool clipper plying the Cape of Good Hope in an age when
steam freighters took the Suez Canal. In much the same way, it
has been treated with a certain sentimental respect – the respect
due to an excellently constructed and presented throwback.
Nevertheless, it has been regarded as somehow qualitatively
belonging to a different age.

Certainly it seems to inhabit a different world from that of
the da Ponte operas, or even that of its immediate successor,
The Abduction from the Seraglio. There are certain distinctive
features to it which would certainly give that initial impression.
The combination of a classical Greek setting, the serious
subject matter, the supernatural influences, and the characters
torn between love and duty sets it apart from anything else in
Mozartʼs output. At first sight, these elements also look like the
stuff of the traditional opera seria, an entertainment conceived
in Italy and enjoying the support of the nobility from London
to Budapest. Idomeneo does indeed inhabit a different world,
but it is not the world of the Italian opera seria. Thematically,
Idomeneo is an opera which is a standard bearer for the
Enlightenment. Mozartʼs later operas, particularly The Marriage
of Figaro and The Magic Flute, are recognised as definitive
statements in the cultural history of that movement, but the more
traditional form of Idomeneo has militated against its being
considered in the same category.

Idomeneo also departs from opera seria in its structure, owing
far more to the French tragédie lyrique. For a start, its libretto
was inspired by that for the French opera Idoménée, written
by André Campra and premiered in 1712 in the final years of
the reign of Louis XIV. It is highly probable that the Elector was
familiar with Campraʼs opera and was taken with the subject
matter, and, as was not unusual with commissions, that he chose
Mozartʼs subject matter. With more decisiveness than insight,
he handed the job of translating and adapting the libretto
over to his court chaplain Varesco, someone who was not
conversant either with singers or the demands of the lyric stage.
The irony of this is that it meant that Mozart had a profound
involvement in the shaping of the libretto, as he was very
unsatisfied with Varescoʼs contribution. We also, unusually, have
a comprehensive record of this, as much of their collaboration
was carried out by correspondence, with Leopold Mozart acting
as an intermediary.

The fact that the origins of the drama come from the French is
significant. Nor should it be doubted that the origins are French
rather than classically Greek – the figure of Idomeneus, the king
of Crete, is mentioned several times in the Iliad, in dispatches,
as it were, but beyond that there is no canonical information. He
could not be called a great Greek mythical figure – no Achilles,
still less an Orpheus, around whom a body of ready-made myth
has accumulated. Ciphers such as Idomeneus nevertheless have
their purposes. They arbitrarily attract themes which a society
needs to explore, and the figure of Idomeneus attracted a
particularly interesting one. Like Jephtha in the Bible, Idomeneus
makes a promise to a god that upon his deliverance he will offer
up the first living being he sees as a sacrifice. As with Jephtha,
fate dictates that the being is his offspring – his son Idamante as
opposed to Jephthaʼs daughter – and he is faced with a terrible
choice of being oath-breaker or filicide. Moral dilemmas of
this sort, which in the works of Racine or Corneille are induced
by a sequence of conventionally honourable intentions and
individually laudable actions, are a feature of French drama.
Conventionally, the principal characters look for a way to
reconcile their conflicting duties, often finding themselves unable
to do so without divine intervention, the deus ex machina which
can resolve the irresolvable.

Again, Idomeneo appears at first sight to correspond to this
format – but even here it has surprises in store. Idomeneoʼs
intentions are conventionally honourable in the sense understood
by the French, but the purpose of articulating them is not to
explore the extent of his honour, but to question the conventions.
His actions are individually laudable, perhaps, but socially
questionable, and it is his social self which is critiqued by them,
not his individual self. The notion that a monarch should have
a social self which is distinct from an individual self is in itself
radical. The saying attributed to Louis XIV, ʻLʼétat, cʼest moiʼ (I
am the state), is almost certainly apocryphal, but it does neatly
express the unity of the monarchʼs social and individual self.
The opera Idomeneo expresses a very different idea of kingship
and divine order. In the traditional tragédie lyrique, monarchy
was depicted in the role of the deus ex machina: the god of
deliverance is by convention a thinly disguised avatar of the
monarch. The king attains a truly divine status (albeit by proxy).
It is a convenient dramatic device, and it goes hand in glove
with an unassailable belief in the divine right of kings, because it
presupposes a variety of ultimate benevolence and purpose
to the universe which, once admitted, must embrace a
divine hierarchy.

Idomeneo is not himself this sort of monarch, nor is the deity
of the opera a depiction of one. Idomeneoʼs god inhabits a
universe where power is unhitched from benevolence or greater
purpose. In fact, both Idomeneo and his god are throwbacks to
the Homeric tradition, in which gods and heroes are answerable
only to their own quest for glory and power. The purpose of the
opera is to show that these gods and these heroes are not what
it takes to rule a happy and prosperous state – that civic virtues
and Homeric virtues are incompatible and that if the Idomeneoʼs
god is proxy for a monarch, then it is a monarch engaged in the
blatant exercise of self-bolstering authority at the expense of
his subjects.

We are not to pray that all things may go as we would have
them, but as most concurrent with prudence.(2)

Idomeneo is not thereby exonerated. Mozart would have been
very aware of the Enlightenment view that to invoke a god for
oneʼs own purpose is blasphemous. That is to say, if God in his
wisdom has seen fit to inflict misfortune upon you, it is incumbent
upon you to accept that misfortune as being part of the purpose
of the higher power. Idomeneo does not accept his misfortune,
but tries to bargain. Furthermore, he responds to an unjust god
with an unjust promise. Idomeneo has promised something which
does not belong to him – another personʼs life. Having made
an oath which he realises belatedly is invidious, he tries to find
a way out of it. The result of that is an ʻunnaturalʼ sequence of
events – he must repudiate his son, deceive his people, permit
suffering, and ultimately accept the prospect of sacrificing his
son, and his own and everyone elseʼs happiness. In short, he
must deny all of those duties which the civically-minded monarch
would consider to be the sine qua non of kingship.

The opera shows that the very human impulse of trying to find a
way out of his dilemma is, in this circumstance, not a very royal
one. In other words, in behaving like a father he is refusing
to behave like a monarch, and vice versa. This is the sort of quandary beloved of the French tragedy – but the parameters of
this quandary are very new territory. The notion that the lives of
a kingʼs subject were not his personal property is in itself a quite
extraordinary ideological development and certainly does not
belong to classical Greece or even Louis XIVʼs France. Instead it
is very tightly connected to ideas of the rights of man, equality
before God, and the social contract which binds even the king.
A king bound by a social contract is only as good as his word,
and it is here that Idomeneoʼs situation becomes particularly
pitiable. For it is by his word – his oath to Neptune – that he has
caused the catastrophic situation in the first place. The suffering
of the people of Crete under the ravages of an irate Neptune
makes Idomeneoʼs obligations very clear to him – by being their
king he is responsible for the welfare of the many, no matter
what it may cost him personally. This is based very firmly on an
Enlightened view of the nature of his monarchy – Homeric virtues
are no longer valued in this world. Civic virtues are what the
state needs.

The profound social responsibilities of kingship are thrown into
relief by the characters of Ilia, the Trojan princess, and the Greek
princess Elettra. Both Ilia and Elettra are themselves royalty,
but have been forcibly absolved of their royal and personal
responsibilities. Ilia, as she articulates in her opening aria, has
lost her family, her home and her position. Elettra is a refugee
from the domestic catastrophe which emerged from the return
of her father Agamemnon and his subsequent murder. Elettra
– Electra – is as an audience familiar with Greek dramas
would know her, but the surprise is that she is the nearest that
the opera comes to a villain. She is a character out of place in
an Enlightened age – refusing to moderate herself or act out
of consideration for others, and not embracing a social role.
Instead, she expects society to adapt itself to her, and when it
does not, she seeks to absent herself from it. By contrast, Ilia, the
ʻenemyʼ captive, refuses to put her own desires before the state
necessities which drive her lover Idamante. Furthermore, she
seeks to integrate herself into her new society – seeking a new
family and home in Crete. In doing so she has acknowledged the
significance of those social ties and displayed an awareness that
nobility is earned by comportment and not simply by blood.

All of the characters end up revolving around Idamante, the
intended sacrificial victim, the lover of Ilia, the unrequiting
beloved of Elettra, the king-in-waiting. By trying to defend Crete
from the monster sent by Neptune, and then by accepting that
the needs of the people supersede those of any individual,
he proves himself worthy where his father has failed. When
Neptune decrees Idomeneoʼs abdication and Idamanteʼs
accession, it is a vindication of selfless and enlightened
monarchy, and of a monarch who seeks to resolve ancient
hatreds by marrying a Trojan princess. The events of the opera
mark the passing of the age of Homeric heroes like Idomeneus
and Electra, who are individuals who put their own interests
first, and the dawn of a civic age of Idamante and Ilia, who
understand that leadership is first and foremost about unity
and responsibility.

When Idomeneo is regarded in this light, itʼs very easy to
see that the Mozart who wrote it was very much the same
Mozart who would go on to write operas extolling the virtues
of forgiveness (in The Abduction from the Seraglio), integrity
(The Marriage of Figaro), self-discipline (Don Giovanni), selfknowledge
(Così fan tutte), wisdom (The Magic Flute) and
clemency (La clemenza di Tito). Mozart was nothing if not a
man with an agenda – but what makes this aspect of his output
so palatable is that his was the most enlightened, humane and
positive of agendas. The music adds a dignity and emotional
clarity which make it hard to resist, even if we wanted to.

Act I
Idomeneo has spent ten years in the Trojan wars and is awaited with longing by his son Idamante. Among Idomeneo’s prisoners of war is the beautiful Princess Ilia, with whom Idamante has fallen in love, and despite their respective positions as captive and victor Ilia also secretly loves Idamante. Idamante is already betrothed to the Greek princess Elettra, whose jealousy grows as she sees Idamante lose all interest in her. Idamante learns that Idomeneo has been killed during a storm at sea off the coast of Crete. Beside himself with grief he runs down to the beach in the hope of finding some relic of his father.

Neptune has spared Idomeneo in return for his promise to sacrifice the first living creature he meets on the beach. When Idamante appears Idomeneo realises to his horror that he must sacrifice his own son, and to Idamante’s despair his father flees from him without telling him why.

Act II
Idomeneo desperately tries to avoid fate: he orders Idamante to take Elettra back to her homeland, thus getting him away from the island and preventing Neptune from exacting the promised sacrifice. As they board their ship a violent storm erupts and a monster appears from the sea. Idomeneo confesses that Neptune wants to punish him.

Act III
Crete is ravaged by plague and the sea monster continues to rage on the beach. Idamante bids farewell to Ilia as he sets out to kill the sea monster. Ilia admits her love for him. The High Priest seeks out Idomeneo in order to force the truth out of him: the gods are claiming new victims every day, and as king, Idomeneo must live up to his responsibilities. With a heavy heart Idomeneo finally reveals that only when his beloved son has been sacrificed to the gods will his people be released. Idomeneo must bow to Neptune. He prepares for the ceremony. Idamante gets ready to fulfil his duty as a sacrificial victim but Ilia intercedes: she wants to give her life for Idamante’s. The gods are appeased by this manifestation of true virtue and love; they decree that Idamante and Ilia shall rule instead of Idomeneo, who is thus absolved of guilt. The people rejoice as Elettra rages. Idomeneo hands over the throne to the young lovers gladly and the opera ends happily.

3] Mozart on Classical Instruments

Mozart’s writing for his opera orchestra is full of gesture and colour. Every single detail is emphasizing the drama – the characters and the story. When Mozart is played on modern instruments, the players need to ‘tone down’ their sound a lot.

With classical instruments, the orchestra is already perfectly balanced. The strings play on gut strings, and everything is at a lower pitch (about a quarter of a tone), which means all the stringed instruments sound mellower, softer and sweeter. The players can use all the range of colours – from something highly dramatic and loud to an exquisitely soft and blended sound, and everything in between. The wind players also play on the highly colourful instruments for which Mozart composed his score. Every interjection or melody on oboe, flute, bassoon or horn comes across in perfect balance and with the specific colour he wanted. The score absolutely comes alive! This also goes for the far greater subtlety of the trumpets, trombones and timpani, who can blend or make an impression at will.

As well as all this, classically trained players use ‘authentic’ performance techniques. This kind of knowledge means that phrases are played with tremendous attention to detail – every phrase contains a gesture of some kind. Players think about these gestures all the time ... it is a highly involving process playing this music.
The string players will use a wide palette of bowings, and much less vibrato than in a modern orchestra. It is a very beautiful affect, hearing such transparency of sound, and will be quite revelatory.

Classical string instruments are different from those in a modern orchestra. These instruments, like baroque ones, will mostly have lighter fingerboards and tail pieces, although we will probably have a bit of a mixture, as in Mozart's day modernization was already occurring and in the 1790's some experimentation was happening. The bow is probably the most important feature that affected style. Bows became curved inwards, as instrumentalists sought to imitate the new bel canto style that sustained long elegant phrases. An inwardly curving bow sounds naturally more even throughout its length.

Classical bows feel extremely light to use, and it's impossible to make a heavy sound. Leopold Mozart, Amadeus' dad, describes our bowing style perfectly, when he writes in his treatise for violin players:
"Every tone, even the strongest attack, has a small, even if barely audible, softness at the beginning of the stroke ... this same softness must be heard also at the end of each stroke. Hence one must know how to divide the bow into weakeness and strength, and therefore how by means of pressure and relaxation, to produce the notes beautifully and touchingly."

Music in Mozart’s day was meant to stir the heart by means of rhetorical devices. Think of the bow as being the equivalent of an orator's voice, with declamatory pauses, gentle inviting tones, sudden attacks, and the constant use of emphasis and de-emphasis. Despite bows advancing towards our modern ones, we will still use a lot of light and shade, and far more articulation than a modern orchestra would. Our vibrato will be minimal, as it was still used as an expressive device.

The size and acoustic of the City Recital Hall are ideal for this music, as we will not need to make the sort of volume of sound a large concert hall requires. Compared to a string player in a modern orchestra, we enjoy enormous freedom in playing expressively and rhetorically, simply because we do not need to play so loudly.

Pinchgut is becoming a favourite pre-Christmas tradition. The fairy lights go up in Martin Place and the houselights go down in City Recital Hall as this resilient and enormously talented bunch of artists present their annual foray into neglected operatic treasures. Idomeneo is, for me, the best production yet.

— The Sydney Morning Herald

The uniformly superlative cast of the Pinchgut Idomeneo was led by a toweringly effective realisation of the title role by Mark Tucker.